Difference between revisions of "VLAN"
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− | + | The farm has more servers and workstations than there are ethernet jacks on the walls of the room. Therefore, two virtual LANs are set up so that all machines can make use of both the farm and UNH networks ([[VLAN#Additional Information|more]]). Ports 1 through 22 on the switch default to the farm network. Therefore, the majority of machines that are connected to the switch through device "eth0" will have access only to each other unless 1) they have an additional, physical connection to a wall jack, or 2) they are configured to use VLAN id 2, a.k.a. "eth0.2". | |
− | The switch | ||
Here is an article on VLAN under Linux: [http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/7268 Linux Journal] | Here is an article on VLAN under Linux: [http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/7268 Linux Journal] | ||
− | + | == Software == | |
+ | ; /sbin/vconfig : Used to create virtual network devices, among other things. Creation is all we currently use it for. | ||
+ | ; /sbin/ifdown, /sbin/ifup : Used for shutting down and starting network interfaces. "Unfortunately, they, like far too many tools, assume a set naming scheme for ethernet family devices. (I might file a bug report if I get around to it:[[Aaron]])." However, with aliases, devices can be referred to as "farm" and "unh" rather than "eth0" and "eth0.2". | ||
+ | ; /usr/bin/system-config-network : Fedora/Redhat GUI tool for configuring network devices, etc. Much nicer than editing config files by hand, setting aliases is easy, and has ifup, ifdown functionality | ||
== Configuration Files == | == Configuration Files == | ||
From /usr/share/doc/initscripts-8.11.1/sysconfig.txt: | From /usr/share/doc/initscripts-8.11.1/sysconfig.txt: | ||
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in the alias file, but all the device information would | in the alias file, but all the device information would | ||
be in the base ifcfg file. | be in the base ifcfg file. | ||
− | In-depth details here: [[Ifcfg_files_details]] | + | In-depth details here: [[Ifcfg_files_details]], but the key is to make sure that eth0.2's configuration has <code>VLAN=yes</code> in it. |
+ | == Additional Information == | ||
+ | * [[General Network Configuration Notes]] |
Revision as of 20:10, 20 June 2007
The farm has more servers and workstations than there are ethernet jacks on the walls of the room. Therefore, two virtual LANs are set up so that all machines can make use of both the farm and UNH networks (more). Ports 1 through 22 on the switch default to the farm network. Therefore, the majority of machines that are connected to the switch through device "eth0" will have access only to each other unless 1) they have an additional, physical connection to a wall jack, or 2) they are configured to use VLAN id 2, a.k.a. "eth0.2".
Here is an article on VLAN under Linux: Linux Journal
Software
- /sbin/vconfig
- Used to create virtual network devices, among other things. Creation is all we currently use it for.
- /sbin/ifdown, /sbin/ifup
- Used for shutting down and starting network interfaces. "Unfortunately, they, like far too many tools, assume a set naming scheme for ethernet family devices. (I might file a bug report if I get around to it:Aaron)." However, with aliases, devices can be referred to as "farm" and "unh" rather than "eth0" and "eth0.2".
- /usr/bin/system-config-network
- Fedora/Redhat GUI tool for configuring network devices, etc. Much nicer than editing config files by hand, setting aliases is easy, and has ifup, ifdown functionality
Configuration Files
From /usr/share/doc/initscripts-8.11.1/sysconfig.txt:
/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-<interface-name> and /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-<interface-name>:<alias-name>: The first defines an interface, and the second contains only the parts of the definition that are different in a "alias" (or alternative) interface. For example, the network numbers might be different, but everything else might be the same, so only the network numbers would be in the alias file, but all the device information would be in the base ifcfg file.
In-depth details here: Ifcfg_files_details, but the key is to make sure that eth0.2's configuration has VLAN=yes
in it.